This Blog will be the travel log of Narrowboat Harnser as we cruise the system. We are not continuous cruisers but just spend as much time as we can on the boat.

For more information about the boat and us please visit our web site http://www.harnser.info

To see some of the places we have visited then please go to http://visitsbyharnser.blogspot.co.uk/

For our latest location please click on the map

Monday, 19 March 2012

Monday 19 March 2012 Holywell

Last night was a tad chilly, it was frosty when we took the dog out and latter dropped to-2.5°C so the boat was also a bit chilly over night 14°C as we didn’t turn the stove up. This morning we woke to bright sunshine and the temperature soon picked up. We walked the dog at 9-30 and I noticed a plane flying in a large circle around Ely at probably 10,000 ft. At first I thought it was just turning back or in a holding pattern but it continued this circle all day, the last time I noticed it was 3-30 this after noon, the circle was so large that it took 12 minuets to complete, that means he did at least 60 circuits.

We left our mooring 10 am and it was not long before we passed this old upturned hull that someone is replating, I think it was like that when we passed here 4 years ago.

By The Tame Otter bridge there is a notice that gives the opening times of Hermitage Lock. It advises to ring for use this time of the year, so it was reverse back through the bridge to note the telephone number. There is talk that the dry dock here will soon be back in business, if its true then it will be a great asset to the area.

Last week it may have been the Grebes that were taking centre stage but yesterday and today it the Oystercatchers that have it. They know its spring and they are telling every one else.

By now the clouds were starting to gather and the wind had freshened a bit, but no sign of the badly needed rain.

We spotter a few birds along this stretch including a Buzzard, Woodpecker, Kingfisher, White Egret and of course loads of Coots and Ducks.

We arrived at Hermitage Lock at about ten past one, when does the lock keeper go to lunch, one till two, so there was nothing to do but sit and wait and read all the notices. One of them told us that the work at St Ives lock is over running a bit and will stay closed until into April, so that will shorten the trip a bit, it should have been completed in February. Dead on two the lock gates opened and the red light was exchanged for a green one, so we were on our way again.

This lock lift you up onto the one and a half mile tidal section of the Ouse where the New Bedford River joins this section, connecting it to below Denver Sluice.

A short way further along is large sluice, this drops excess water into the Old Bedford River.

We pulled over to fill with water at Earith, there was a chap and his wife there polishing their boat in almost the same colours as our. We got talking and I mentioned the plane that was still doing large circles overhead. With the aid of a decent pair of binoculars he was able to identify it as an AWAC. Once full of water we were on our way upstream to leave the tidal section at Brownshill Stanch. The lock is on the left hand end and the lifting sluices give a very tricky current in the lock mouth. When we arrived we spotted the chap on the scaffolding against the top gate, our first thought was the lock was out of use, but it turned out he was only fitting navigation indicators to show when the lock was not in use. We just had to wait until he came down the scaffold and then he operated the lock to get us through. We had planned to moor at the Fish and Ell GOBA moorings but as there were cattle running free the ground wasn’t in the best of condition we decided to push on a bit, the next two GOBA moorings the banks were a bit rough, OK for us but Magic can’t jump now so we have to have somewhere where its easy for him just to step off so we continued on to Holywell where there is a public mooring in front of the pub, unfortunately the Narrowboat we have seen 4 times this week was moored there,but he told us he was leaving when his wife returned so we dropped back and moored on the last GOBA mooring. About 5 pm. the Narrowboat left Holywell so moved up there, but as you can see from how we are moored there is a distinct lack of water, but what a lovely sky to end the day with.

Just across the green is The Ferry Boat Inn and what a lovely outlook they have.

2 comments:

Anonymous
said...

the first time i went to the ferry i thought the terrace was on the river as the water was lapping right up to it. when i lived round there the road at earith was invariably flooded in winter and my wife had a 40 mile detour to work in ely.(25 years ago though).skpt